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Autopackage
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Autopackage was a free computer package management system aimed at making it simple to create a package that can be installed on all Linux distributions, created by Mike Hearn around 2002. In August 2010, Listaller and Autopackage announced that the projects will merge, projects such as aMSN and Inkscape offered an Autopackage installer, and Freshmeat. net offers content submitters a field to put the URL of Autopackages. The list of packages is very limited, and most program versions are obsolete. Concept of autopackage was to improve Linux to a platform, with stable binary interfaces comparable to Windows. Autopackage is not intended to provide installation of applications and libraries for compatibility reasons. Using Autopackage to distribute non-core libraries is something of a thorny issue, on the one hand distributing them via Autopackage allows installation on a greater range of systems, on the other hand there can be conflicts with native package dependencies. Autopackage is intended as a system to a distributions usual packaging system, such as RPM. Unlike these formats, Autopackage verifies dependencies by checking for the presence of deployed files and this simplifies the design requirements for autopackage by relying on available resources, rather than necessitating tracking all the package choices of all targeted distributions. Programs that use autopackage must also be relocatable, meaning they must be installable to varying directories with a single binary and this enables an autopackage to be installed by a non-root user in the users home directory. Autopackage packages are indicated by the. package extension and they are executable bash scripts, and can be installed by running them. Files in an Autopackage archive are not easily extracted by anything other than Autopackage itself as the format must be parsed in order to determine file layout. Autopackage programs are installed to hard-coded system paths, which may conflict with existing packages installed by other means and this can usually be remedied by uninstalling an older version of a package being installed with Autopackage. The Autopackage files can also be installed and removed using the Listaller toolset, Listaller simply includes the Autopackage packages into its own package container format and handles Autopackage like any other Listaller package file. AppImage Flatpak Zero Install Listaller Package management system Bundle Linux package formats List of software package management systems Official website